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Introduction to American Legal Research Presented by Jennifer Selby and Ann Chase, Reference Librarians, U-M Law Library July 9, 2008 PowerPoint Courtesy.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to American Legal Research Presented by Jennifer Selby and Ann Chase, Reference Librarians, U-M Law Library July 9, 2008 PowerPoint Courtesy."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to American Legal Research Presented by Jennifer Selby and Ann Chase, Reference Librarians, U-M Law Library July 9, 2008 PowerPoint Courtesy of Barbara Garavaglia, Assistant Director, U-M Law Library

2 Today we’ll discuss…  The structure of the legal system in the United States  Primary American law and where to find it  Secondary American sources and where to find them  Major print and online sources

3 Recurring themes throughout…  Mirror image of federal and state legal structure  Controlling authority (“what the law is”) constantly in flux  Reliance on most current authority

4 What is the legal system in the U.S.?  Common law jurisdiction  Federal system of government  1 national system, created by the Constitution  50 different state systems  Government has 3 branches:  Legislative  Executive  Judiciary

5 Federal Government U.S. Constitution Legislative Branch House of Representatives & Senate; pass laws called statutes. Judicial branch Trial & appellate courts decide cases. Highest court is Supreme Court. Executive branch President signs or vetoes statutes. Agencies promulgate Regulations.

6 Most state governments have a similar structure State Constitution Legislative branch Usually 2 houses: House of Representatives & Senate. Statutes Judicial branch Trial & Appellate courts. Cases Executive branch Elected Governor signs or vetoes laws; agencies promulgate regulations

7 What is a common law system?  Body of law that originated in medieval England  Common law system relies on…  Court opinions and the principle of stare decisis (“Rule of adherence to judicial precedents.” Black’s Law Dictionary, 8 th ed.)  Statutes (also called laws, legislation, codes, acts of Congress)  Regulations (issued by state or federal agencies)  Interplay between statutes, regulations and court opinions.

8 Some differences between common and civil law systems  “Codes” are subject compilations of laws  No presumption that all statutes or “codes” cover all legal problems  Major areas of common law not governed by statute  Uses principle of stare decisis (also called “binding precedent”)  Judges interpret the law, don’t simply apply it  Reliance on precedent  Looks to most recent “authority”

9 What are “primary legal materials”?  The laws themselves  May be constitutions, statutes, regulations, court opinions  May be state or federal  Mandatory authority within the jurisdiction  Persuasive authority outside the jurisdiction

10 Constitutions: Federal  U.S. Constitution  Provides for “separation of powers” by forming three branches of federal government  Available online at http://www.findlaw.com/casecode/constitution/ http://www.findlaw.com/casecode/constitution/

11 Constitutions: State  States also have constitutions  In the Law Library at “State Coll” in the “annotated code” of each state  Online at http://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.htmlhttp://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.html

12 Statutes: Federal  Federal statutes: Laws passed by both houses of the U.S. Congress and signed by the President  The President may also “veto” a law  Congress may override the President’s veto  The U.S. Supreme Court may later declare a law unconstitutional  This is “separation of powers”!

13 Statutes: Federal  Federal statutes are published chronologically in the Statutes at Large as “Public Laws”  In the Law Library at “Fed Coll”  Public laws online from 1973/1974 to current at http://thomas.loc.gov/bss/d110/d110laws.html http://thomas.loc.gov/bss/d110/d110laws.html  Federal statutes are also published in the United States Code, arranged by subject  In the Law Library at “Fed Coll”  Online at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/uscode/http://www.gpoaccess.gov/uscode/

14 Statutes: State  State statutes: Passed by both houses of the state legislature and signed by the governor  The governor may veto the law  The legislature may override the veto  The state Supreme Courts or the U.S. Supreme Court may later declare the law unconstitutional

15 Statutes: State  State statutes are published chronologically as “Session Laws”  State statutes are also published in subject compilations called “codes”  In the Law Library at “State Coll”  Online at http://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.htmlhttp://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.html

16 Regulations: Federal  Administrative agencies have been given authority by Congress to…  Issue regulations to administer the day-to-day implementation of complex legislation  Adjudicate disputes in the first instance  Some agencies are…  Department of Energy  Department of Agriculture  Department of Defense  And others…

17 Regulations: Federal  To become law, regulations are proposed and made public in the Federal Register  Then go through a period of public comment  And are published as a final rule in the Federal Register  Regulations may later be found illegal by federal courts, or may be voided by statute

18 Regulations: Federal  Federal regulations are published chronologically in the Federal Register  Online at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/  Federal regulations are also published by subject in the Code of Federal Regulations  In the Law Library at “Fed Coll”  Online at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/cfr/http://www.gpoaccess.gov/cfr/

19 Regulations: State  State agencies also issue regulations  State regulations are published in administrative “codes” and registers  In the Law Library at “State Coll”  Online at http://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.htmlhttp://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.html Select individual state & browse for Administrative Code

20 To sum up…  So far we’ve seen…  Primary legislative materials Constitutions Statutes Regulations  Now we’ll look at…  Primary judicial materials Court opinions

21 Court System: Federal  District Courts  Trial court level  Usually do not publish opinions  Circuit Courts of Appeal  12 circuits, including D.C. Map: http://www.law.emory.edu/index.php?id=2997/http://www.law.emory.edu/index.php?id=2997/  Appellate jurisdiction  Usually publish opinions  Supreme Court of the United States  Appellate jurisdiction over Circuit Courts and state courts  Almost always publish opinions

22 Court System: State  State circuit or district courts  Trial court level  Rarely publish opinions  State Court of Appeal  Appellate jurisdiction  Usually publish opinions  State Supreme Court  Appellate jurisdiction  Almost always publish opinions  Decisions can be appealed to U.S. Supreme Court

23 Court opinions are primary materials too!  Principle of “stare decisis” is significant in American law  Key difference between common and civil law systems  “Stare decisis is the doctrine of precedent, under which it is necessary for a court to follow earlier judicial decisions when the same point arises again in litigation.” Black’s Law Dictionary, 8 th ed.  Mandatory within the jurisdiction, persuasive outside of the jurisdiction

24 Locating court opinions  Federal and state court opinions published chronologically in “reporters”  No subject compilations!  “Digests”: Subject index to court opinions  Westlaw https://lawschool.westlaw.com/ and Lexis https://www.lexis.com/ are better for case finding than print digestshttps://lawschool.westlaw.com/ https://www.lexis.com/  “Annotated codes”: Summaries of court opinions construing statutes follow each statutory section

25 Court Opinions: Federal  U.S. Supreme Court opinions published in United States Reports, Supreme Court Reporter, Supreme Court Reports (Lawyers Ed.)  In Law Library at “Fed Coll Repts”  Online at http://www.supremecourtus.gov/http://www.supremecourtus.gov/  Circuit Court opinions published in Federal Reporter and District court opinions, specialty court opinions published in Federal Supplement  Both in Law Library at “Fed Coll Repts”

26 Court Opinions: State  Published in state reporters  In Law Library at “State Coll”  Online at http://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.htmlhttp://www.law.cornell.edu/states/listing.html

27 Court opinions must always be “updated”…  Must determine whether the case is still “good law”  Case has not been overturned by another case or abrogated by a statute  Use Shepard’s or KeyCite  Online versions on Reference computers  Also available within Lexis (Shepard’s) and Westlaw (Keycite)

28 To review…  Common law jurisdiction  Mirror-image structure of federal and state legal systems  Primary materials: the law itself  Legislative materials  Judicial materials  Now let’s talk about the process of American legal research…

29 How do I start researching a point of American law?  Use “secondary sources”  Explain, describe, discuss the law  Not the law itself; cannot generally be cited to a court  Researchers use secondary sources to…  Start research when unfamiliar with an area of law  Obtain a detailed understanding of an area of law  Find citations to major primary sources in an area of law, as a starting point in research

30 What are “secondary sources”?  Books (also called “treatises”)  Use online library catalogs or Law Library Book Lists http://umil.iii.com/screens/booklists.html (Law Library Home > Catalog Tab > Book Lists) http://umil.iii.com/screens/booklists.html  Legal encyclopedias  In Law Library at “Ref Coll”  “Restatements of the Law”  In Law Library at “Ref Coll”  Articles in law reviews and journals  To locate, use periodicals indexes or search full text in Lexis or Westlaw

31 Online Library Catalogs  The Law Library’s catalog, http://umil.iii.com/ http://umil.iii.com/  The University Libraries catalog, http://mirlyn.lib.umich.edu/ http://mirlyn.lib.umich.edu/  Kresge Business School Library catalog, http://lib.bus.umich.edu/ http://lib.bus.umich.edu/

32 Major Legal Periodical Indexes and Databases  Index to Legal Periodicals and Books (print and online)  Index to Foreign Legal Periodicals (print and online)  Current Law Index (print)/LegalTrac (online)  Hein Online (online only)  Print in Law Library at “Ref Coll”  Online links at Law Library Home > All E-Resources > Browse by… Categories > Journal Indexes http://umil.iii.com/search/m?Journal+Indexes http://umil.iii.com/search/m?Journal+Indexes

33 General Internet Sources for American Legal Research  FindLaw: http://www.findlaw.com/http://www.findlaw.com/  GPOAccess: http://www.gpoaccess.gov/http://www.gpoaccess.gov/  Cornell Legal Information Institute: http://www.law.cornell.edu/ http://www.law.cornell.edu/  For more information and sites, see “Legal Research on the Internet” guide: http://www.law.umich.edu/library/students/research/Pages /workshopmaterials.aspx http://www.law.umich.edu/library/students/research/Pages /workshopmaterials.aspx

34 LexisNexis Academic  http://libproxy.law.umich.edu:2048/login?url=http://web.le xis-nexis.com/universe http://libproxy.law.umich.edu:2048/login?url=http://web.le xis-nexis.com/universe  Law Reviews  Federal and State Cases and Codes (Statutes)  Shepard’s Citations  Also has Tax Law, Patents, and Foreign Law databases  Access available on campus. You may use law library computers to access LN Academic  Consult LN tutorials for detailed help  Related Products: LexisNexis Congressional, Statistical, State Capital

35 To review…  The “process of American legal research”:  To start researching American law, use secondary sources  Secondary sources lead you to primary sources  Research in primary sources leads you to additional primary sources

36 If you have questions about any aspect of legal research…  Come to the Law Library Reference Desk! Open 7 days a week, 9 a.m. till midnight  Use “Ask a Law Librarian” email reference service: askalawlibrarian@umich.edu askalawlibrarian@umich.edu  Use the Law Library’s Online Tutorials and Audio Tours

37 Questions?


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